Snek

2015Image macro / captioned animal memesemi-active

Also known as: Danger Noodle · Nope Rope · Boop Noodle

Snek is a 2015 image-macro meme featuring snakes with cutesy, intentionally misspelled interior monologues in baby-talk grammar, rebranding the reptiles as adorable "danger noodles.

Snek is an internet meme built around images of snakes captioned with cutesy, misspelled interior monologues. Emerging from intentional misspellings in the early 2010s, the format took off in late 2015 on Facebook and Reddit, borrowing the baby-talk grammar of Doge and LOLcats while giving snakes a distinctly adorable, faux-tough personality. The meme doubled as stealth PR for pet snakes, rebranding them from creepy reptiles into lovable "danger noodles."

TL;DR

Snek memes feature photographs of snakes overlaid with captions written in a childlike, deliberately misspelled dialect.

Overview

Snek memes feature photographs of snakes overlaid with captions written in a childlike, deliberately misspelled dialect1. The captions read as the snake's inner thoughts, typically portraying them as tiny, fierce creatures trying to sound tough but coming across as adorable instead2. The word "heck" replaces actual profanity, and verbs follow a "doing a [verb]" construction borrowed from DoggoLingo4. Common vocabulary includes "boop" (tapping a snake's nose), "smol" (small), and "heckin" (an intensifier)2.

What sets snek apart from other animal memes is its emotional register. Where Doge memes conveyed overwhelming awe and LOLcats spoke in broken English for laughs, snek captures a very specific comedy: a small, supposedly dangerous creature insisting on its own ferocity while clearly being harmless2. The snakes in these memes talk a big game but read like puppies in costume.

The word "snek" appeared as what looks like a genuine misspelling in several YouTube video titles between 2009 and 2011, including one titled "Baby.snek (1).3gp" showing a baby near a King Cobra1. By 2012, the misspelling was being used intentionally, part of the same wave of deliberate bad grammar that powered LOLcats and Doge1.

A key early moment came around 2014, when an image of a woman holding a large snake was paired with a Facebook post reading simply "this is snek"1. Whether that original poster misspelled "snake" on purpose or was writing in a non-native English dialect, the post helped crystallize the meme's identity1. The "This Is Snek" post proved popular enough to inspire the creation of r/snek on Reddit3.

The first known snek meme with full interior monologue captioning was posted to the Facebook community "Snek" on October 16, 20153. It picked up over 100 likes and 20 shares within five months. The next documented example appeared on FunnyJunk on November 11, 2015, posted by user therealdolan3.

Origin & Background

Platform
Facebook (Snek community page), Reddit (r/snek, r/sneks)
Creator
Unknown
Date
2015
Year
2015

The word "snek" appeared as what looks like a genuine misspelling in several YouTube video titles between 2009 and 2011, including one titled "Baby.snek (1).3gp" showing a baby near a King Cobra. By 2012, the misspelling was being used intentionally, part of the same wave of deliberate bad grammar that powered LOLcats and Doge.

A key early moment came around 2014, when an image of a woman holding a large snake was paired with a Facebook post reading simply "this is snek". Whether that original poster misspelled "snake" on purpose or was writing in a non-native English dialect, the post helped crystallize the meme's identity. The "This Is Snek" post proved popular enough to inspire the creation of r/snek on Reddit.

The first known snek meme with full interior monologue captioning was posted to the Facebook community "Snek" on October 16, 2015. It picked up over 100 likes and 20 shares within five months. The next documented example appeared on FunnyJunk on November 11, 2015, posted by user therealdolan.

How It Spread

The meme moved fast in early 2016. On February 6, a snek variation uploaded to Imgur hit over 100,000 views in under two months. Six days later, Imgur user RonSwansonApproves posted a gallery of snek examples that pulled in 40,000 views and 1,000 favorites within a month. On February 21, the Facebook "Snek" page shared a hognose snake version that blew up with 3,500 likes and 4,000 shares.

The meme spread across Facebook, Reddit, Tumblr, and FunnyJunk throughout early 2016. Pet snake owners on Tumblr and Instagram adopted "snek" as a tag for photos of their own pets, calling them "danger noodles," "long dogs," and "smol babies". Multiple snek subreddits popped up: r/snek, r/sneks, and r/snek_irl. The language overlapped heavily with DoggoLingo, the broader internet dialect used for talking about animals that includes words like "boop," "blep," and "heckin".

The Daily Dot covered the meme in 2016, describing snek as "the slithering, scaly, surprisingly adorable heir to Doge". Internet linguist Gretchen McCulloch analyzed the grammar, noting that snek's "doing a [verb]" construction and Doge's "very [noun]" both use selectional restriction mismatch, putting words where they don't normally belong. McCulloch called this pattern "stylized incoherence mirroring emotional incoherence," placing snek in the broader family of animal memes that mimic how people actually talk to their pets.

In 2016, artist Alex Cohen launched *Tiny Snek Comics*, a webcomic starring a cute, tiny cartoon snake that built on the meme's vocabulary and tone.

How to Use This Meme

The snek format is loose, but follows some common patterns:

1

Find a snake photo. The funnier the snake looks, the better. Hognose snakes, tiny snakes in hats, and snakes with "angry" expressions are popular choices.

2

Write the snake's inner monologue. Use snek dialect: swap "snake" for "snek," drop prepositions, misspell deliberately. Replace swear words with "heck" or "heckin."

3

Scatter captions around the image rather than using a single text block (closer to the Doge format than the LOLcat format).

4

Give the snake a personality. The classic snek tone is a tiny creature trying to sound intimidating. Phrases like "am danger," "heck off," "doing a frighten," and "no step on snek" fit the format.

Cultural Impact

Snek memes did real work changing how people think about snakes online. The Daily Dot noted that the Tumblr snek community functioned as a "fantastic way to normalize snakes," reframing them not as creepy predators but as "dumb goofy animals whose predatory instincts now manifest only as adorable tomfoolery". Snake owners used the meme as entry-point advocacy, describing their pets with snek vocabulary to make them seem approachable.

Humorist Mallory Ortberg, when shown snek memes by The Daily Dot, identified their core appeal: "something small and ferocious trying to maintain its dignity and trying to inspire fear or at least respect". She coined her own nickname for the de-fanged meme snakes: "A snake is inherently comical. But when you remove size and poison from it, it's comical and pathetic. No longer a big dick with fangs. Just a little fuckin' ribbon with eyes".

The meme's language fed into the larger DoggoLingo movement. Wikipedia's entry on DoggoLingo specifically lists "snek," "nope rope," and "danger noodle" as standard animal-variant vocabulary within the dialect.

Fun Facts

The "doing a [verb]" construction that defines snek grammar also appears in the dog meme "Stop it son, you are doing me a frighten," showing how animal meme dialects cross-pollinate.

Snek vocabulary predates the meme format itself. Snake owners on Tumblr were calling their pets "sneks" and "danger noodles" before the captioned image macro format existed.

Urban Dictionary defines sneks with characteristic on-brand language: "Boopnoodles, Dangernoodles, whatever you call them. They are cuddly".

The earliest YouTube appearance of "snek" as a misspelling dates to 2009, a full six years before the meme format took shape.

Derivatives & Variations

"No Step on Snek"

— A parody of the Gadsden flag ("Don't Tread on Me") featuring a crudely drawn snake and childlike lettering. The image was turned into flags, patches, and doormats[1].

Tiny Snek Comics

— A webcomic by artist Alex Cohen launched in 2016, featuring a cute tiny snake speaking in snek dialect[1].

r/sneks subreddit

— A Reddit community for snek-style content and pet snake photos, with posts and comments written in meme dialect[1].

"Doing a frighten" / "Doing a heck"

— Phrasal templates from snek that crossed over into general DoggoLingo and dog meme culture[2].

Social Justice Snake

— A niche counter-meme blog noted by The Daily Dot as one of the rare non-positive uses of snek imagery[2].

Frequently Asked Questions

Snek

2015Image macro / captioned animal memesemi-active

Also known as: Danger Noodle · Nope Rope · Boop Noodle

Snek is a 2015 image-macro meme featuring snakes with cutesy, intentionally misspelled interior monologues in baby-talk grammar, rebranding the reptiles as adorable "danger noodles.

Snek is an internet meme built around images of snakes captioned with cutesy, misspelled interior monologues. Emerging from intentional misspellings in the early 2010s, the format took off in late 2015 on Facebook and Reddit, borrowing the baby-talk grammar of Doge and LOLcats while giving snakes a distinctly adorable, faux-tough personality. The meme doubled as stealth PR for pet snakes, rebranding them from creepy reptiles into lovable "danger noodles."

TL;DR

Snek memes feature photographs of snakes overlaid with captions written in a childlike, deliberately misspelled dialect.

Overview

Snek memes feature photographs of snakes overlaid with captions written in a childlike, deliberately misspelled dialect. The captions read as the snake's inner thoughts, typically portraying them as tiny, fierce creatures trying to sound tough but coming across as adorable instead. The word "heck" replaces actual profanity, and verbs follow a "doing a [verb]" construction borrowed from DoggoLingo. Common vocabulary includes "boop" (tapping a snake's nose), "smol" (small), and "heckin" (an intensifier).

What sets snek apart from other animal memes is its emotional register. Where Doge memes conveyed overwhelming awe and LOLcats spoke in broken English for laughs, snek captures a very specific comedy: a small, supposedly dangerous creature insisting on its own ferocity while clearly being harmless. The snakes in these memes talk a big game but read like puppies in costume.

The word "snek" appeared as what looks like a genuine misspelling in several YouTube video titles between 2009 and 2011, including one titled "Baby.snek (1).3gp" showing a baby near a King Cobra. By 2012, the misspelling was being used intentionally, part of the same wave of deliberate bad grammar that powered LOLcats and Doge.

A key early moment came around 2014, when an image of a woman holding a large snake was paired with a Facebook post reading simply "this is snek". Whether that original poster misspelled "snake" on purpose or was writing in a non-native English dialect, the post helped crystallize the meme's identity. The "This Is Snek" post proved popular enough to inspire the creation of r/snek on Reddit.

The first known snek meme with full interior monologue captioning was posted to the Facebook community "Snek" on October 16, 2015. It picked up over 100 likes and 20 shares within five months. The next documented example appeared on FunnyJunk on November 11, 2015, posted by user therealdolan.

Origin & Background

Platform
Facebook (Snek community page), Reddit (r/snek, r/sneks)
Creator
Unknown
Date
2015
Year
2015

The word "snek" appeared as what looks like a genuine misspelling in several YouTube video titles between 2009 and 2011, including one titled "Baby.snek (1).3gp" showing a baby near a King Cobra. By 2012, the misspelling was being used intentionally, part of the same wave of deliberate bad grammar that powered LOLcats and Doge.

A key early moment came around 2014, when an image of a woman holding a large snake was paired with a Facebook post reading simply "this is snek". Whether that original poster misspelled "snake" on purpose or was writing in a non-native English dialect, the post helped crystallize the meme's identity. The "This Is Snek" post proved popular enough to inspire the creation of r/snek on Reddit.

The first known snek meme with full interior monologue captioning was posted to the Facebook community "Snek" on October 16, 2015. It picked up over 100 likes and 20 shares within five months. The next documented example appeared on FunnyJunk on November 11, 2015, posted by user therealdolan.

How It Spread

The meme moved fast in early 2016. On February 6, a snek variation uploaded to Imgur hit over 100,000 views in under two months. Six days later, Imgur user RonSwansonApproves posted a gallery of snek examples that pulled in 40,000 views and 1,000 favorites within a month. On February 21, the Facebook "Snek" page shared a hognose snake version that blew up with 3,500 likes and 4,000 shares.

The meme spread across Facebook, Reddit, Tumblr, and FunnyJunk throughout early 2016. Pet snake owners on Tumblr and Instagram adopted "snek" as a tag for photos of their own pets, calling them "danger noodles," "long dogs," and "smol babies". Multiple snek subreddits popped up: r/snek, r/sneks, and r/snek_irl. The language overlapped heavily with DoggoLingo, the broader internet dialect used for talking about animals that includes words like "boop," "blep," and "heckin".

The Daily Dot covered the meme in 2016, describing snek as "the slithering, scaly, surprisingly adorable heir to Doge". Internet linguist Gretchen McCulloch analyzed the grammar, noting that snek's "doing a [verb]" construction and Doge's "very [noun]" both use selectional restriction mismatch, putting words where they don't normally belong. McCulloch called this pattern "stylized incoherence mirroring emotional incoherence," placing snek in the broader family of animal memes that mimic how people actually talk to their pets.

In 2016, artist Alex Cohen launched *Tiny Snek Comics*, a webcomic starring a cute, tiny cartoon snake that built on the meme's vocabulary and tone.

How to Use This Meme

The snek format is loose, but follows some common patterns:

1

Find a snake photo. The funnier the snake looks, the better. Hognose snakes, tiny snakes in hats, and snakes with "angry" expressions are popular choices.

2

Write the snake's inner monologue. Use snek dialect: swap "snake" for "snek," drop prepositions, misspell deliberately. Replace swear words with "heck" or "heckin."

3

Scatter captions around the image rather than using a single text block (closer to the Doge format than the LOLcat format).

4

Give the snake a personality. The classic snek tone is a tiny creature trying to sound intimidating. Phrases like "am danger," "heck off," "doing a frighten," and "no step on snek" fit the format.

Cultural Impact

Snek memes did real work changing how people think about snakes online. The Daily Dot noted that the Tumblr snek community functioned as a "fantastic way to normalize snakes," reframing them not as creepy predators but as "dumb goofy animals whose predatory instincts now manifest only as adorable tomfoolery". Snake owners used the meme as entry-point advocacy, describing their pets with snek vocabulary to make them seem approachable.

Humorist Mallory Ortberg, when shown snek memes by The Daily Dot, identified their core appeal: "something small and ferocious trying to maintain its dignity and trying to inspire fear or at least respect". She coined her own nickname for the de-fanged meme snakes: "A snake is inherently comical. But when you remove size and poison from it, it's comical and pathetic. No longer a big dick with fangs. Just a little fuckin' ribbon with eyes".

The meme's language fed into the larger DoggoLingo movement. Wikipedia's entry on DoggoLingo specifically lists "snek," "nope rope," and "danger noodle" as standard animal-variant vocabulary within the dialect.

Fun Facts

The "doing a [verb]" construction that defines snek grammar also appears in the dog meme "Stop it son, you are doing me a frighten," showing how animal meme dialects cross-pollinate.

Snek vocabulary predates the meme format itself. Snake owners on Tumblr were calling their pets "sneks" and "danger noodles" before the captioned image macro format existed.

Urban Dictionary defines sneks with characteristic on-brand language: "Boopnoodles, Dangernoodles, whatever you call them. They are cuddly".

The earliest YouTube appearance of "snek" as a misspelling dates to 2009, a full six years before the meme format took shape.

Derivatives & Variations

"No Step on Snek"

— A parody of the Gadsden flag ("Don't Tread on Me") featuring a crudely drawn snake and childlike lettering. The image was turned into flags, patches, and doormats[1].

Tiny Snek Comics

— A webcomic by artist Alex Cohen launched in 2016, featuring a cute tiny snake speaking in snek dialect[1].

r/sneks subreddit

— A Reddit community for snek-style content and pet snake photos, with posts and comments written in meme dialect[1].

"Doing a frighten" / "Doing a heck"

— Phrasal templates from snek that crossed over into general DoggoLingo and dog meme culture[2].

Social Justice Snake

— A niche counter-meme blog noted by The Daily Dot as one of the rare non-positive uses of snek imagery[2].

Frequently Asked Questions